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CUCHULINN (Cuchuinn; pronounced " Coohoollin ") , the chiefSee also: warrior in the Conchobar-Cuchulinn or older heroic (See also: Ulster) See also: cycle of See also: Ireland
.
The See also: story of his origin is very obscure
.
The See also: god See also: Lug is represented as. having been swallowed in a draught of See also: wine by his See also: mother Dechtire, See also: sister of Conchobar, who was See also: king of Ulster
.
But it is not unlikely that this story was invented to supersede the account of the incestuous union of Conchobar with his sister, which seems to be hinted at on various occasions
.
Usually, however, he is styled son of Sualdam, an Ulster warrior who plays a very inferior
See also: part in the cycle
.
His earliest name was Setanta, and he was brought up at Dun Imbrith (See also: Louth)
.
When he was six years of age he announced his intention of going to Conchobar's See also: court at Emain Macha (See also: Navan See also: Rath near See also: Armagh) to See also: play with the boys there
.
He defeats all the boys in marvellous fashion and is received as one of their number
.
Shortly of ter he kills Culann, the See also: smith's
See also: hound, a huge See also: watch-See also: dog
.
The smith laments that all his See also: property is of no value now that his watchman is slain, whereupon the See also: young See also: hero offers to guard his domains until a whelp of the hound's has grown
.
From this the boy received the name of Cu Chulinn or Culann's Hound
.
The next See also: year Cuchulinn receives arms, makes his first foray, and slays the three sons of Necht, redoubtable hereditary foes of the Ulstermen, in the plain of Meath
.
The men of Ulster decide that Cuchulinn must marry, as all the See also: women of Ireland are in love with him
.
Chosen envoys fail to find a bride worthy of him after a year's See also: search, but the hero goes straight to Emer, the daughter of Forgall the Wily, at Lusk (county See also: Dublin)
.
The lady is promised to him if he will go to learn chivalry of Domnall the Soldierly and the See also: amazon Scathach in See also: Alba
.
After enduring See also: great hardships he goes through the course and leaves a son Connlaech behind in Scotland by another amazon, Aife
.
On his return he carries off and weds Emer
.
He is represented as living at Dun Delgan (See also: Dundalk)
.
The greatest of all the hero's achievements was the defence of the frontier of Ulster against the forces of Medb, See also: queen of Connaught, who had come to carry off the famous See also: Brown Bull of Cualnge (Cooley)
.
The men of Ulster were all suffering from a
See also: strange debility, and Cuchulinn had to undertake the defence single-handed from See also: November to See also: February
.
This was when he was seventeen years of age
.
The cycle contains a large number of episodes, such as the gaining of the champion's portion and the tragical See also: death by the warrior's See also: hand of his own son Connlaech
.
When he was twenty-seven he met with his end at the hands of Lugaid, son of Curoi MacDaire, the famous Munster warrior, and the See also: children of Calatin Dana, in revenge for their See also: father's death (see See also: CELT: Irish Literature).'
See also: Medieval Christian synchronists make Clichulinn's death take place about the beginning of the Christian era
.
It is not necessary to regard Cuchulinn as a See also: form of the solar hero, as some writers have done
.
Most, if not all, of his wonderful attributes may be ascribed to the Irish predilection for the See also: grotesque
.
It is true that Cuchulinn seems to stand in a See also: special relation to the Tuatha De Danann See also: leader, the god Lug, but in See also: primitive See also: societies there is always a tendency to ascribe a divine parentage to men who stand out pre-eminently in prowess beyond their See also: fellows
.
See A
.
Nutt, Cuchulainn, the Irish See also: Achilles (See also: London, 1900) ; E
.
See also: Hull, The Cuchullin Saga (London, 1898)
.
(E
.
C
.
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